Latest Features of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS: The Noble Numbat Release Explained

Latest Features of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS: The Noble Numbat Release Explained

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Latest Features of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS: The Noble Numbat Release Explained

Key Takeaways

  • Ubuntu 24.04, Noble Numbat, releases on April 25, 2024.
  • New features include extended support, GNOME 46, and important kernel updates.
  • Upgrading to 24.04 is worth it. You get enhanced security, the benefits of GNOME 46, better hardware support, and updated software packages.

Ubuntu 24.04, code-named “Noble Numbat”, has a release date of April 25, 2024. We fired up the beta build to see whether it was worth upgrading to Canonical’s newest long-term support release.

A Look at Ubuntu 24.04

Another April, another Ubuntu. As regular and unfailing as the changing of the seasons, twice a year we get a new release of Ubuntu. There’s the April build, and there’s the October build.

Every two years, the April release is a Long-Term Support version, getting five years of support and updates from Canonical. If you subscribe to Ubuntu Pro , which is free for home users, the support period is extended to 10 years. If you want to, you can purchase another two years of support, making it 12 years in total.

As well as extended support, Numbat delivers a new installer, kernel updates, GNOME 46, refreshed software packages, and security enhancements. All that and a new mascot, and the obligatory set of new wallpapers.

Security is an even hotter topic than usual at the moment, following the discovery of the malicious backdoor built into the xz compression library which could allow attackers to access vulnerable systems over SSH. This targeted distributions based on Debian and Red Hat, not just Ubuntu. Canonical wisely delayed the beta release of 24.04 so that they could rebuild all binaries, ensuring the new release was clean.

The new installer has a modern and uncluttered look to it, with plenty of white space, and a subtle single emblem on each screen. Apart from the aesthetics, there are some changes to existing screens and some new screens.

The Ubuntu 24.04 Installer language selection screen

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It’s great to see a new Accessibility screen taking up position right behind the Choose Your Language screen, giving it the importance and prominence it deserves.

The Ubuntu 24.04 Installer Accessibility screen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

The network connection screen has been revamped, with its new look giving it the sleeker appearance favored by the other installation screens. You can choose to connect by wired connection, by wireless if you’re on a portable device, or to choose later.

The Ubuntu 24.04 installer Internet Connection screen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

This release follows the trend set in Ubuntu 23.10 of selecting the option to install a minimalist (for Ubuntu) collection of applications. You can still opt to install everything Ubuntu traditionally provides, but you need to consciously make that choice.

The Ubuntu 24.04 installer Applications screen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

Linux Kernel 6.8

The new kernel boasts the usual collection of security bug fixes, patches, and enhancements, such as extended support for Secure Boot and disk encryption, and the ability to “stack” Linux security modules. New features include improved hardware compatibility and optimized power management for laptops.

We used a nightly development build to do our testing. There’s a slim chance there may be some changes between this version and the final release, but it’s extremely unlikely.

Neofetch output in an Ubuntu 24.04 terminal window

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

The existing Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS) has been replaced by a new Earliest Eligible Virtual Deadline First (EEVDF) CPU scheduler. This is based on academic research from the late 1990’s and early 2000’s. The new scheduler reduces latency in certain scenarios.

The intel_idle CPU Idle Time Management Driver is part of the CPU idle time management subsystem. Support has been extended to the Grand Ridge and Sierra Forest processors.

Not to be outdone, AMD CPUs receive a collection of performance enhancements.

Sticking with CPUs, albeit in a virtual way, KVM virtualization can now support up to 4096 virtual CPUs. The ability to have nested virtual machines has been added for the IBM POWER processor ppc64el.

The kernel now supports Intel Shadow Stack, allowing processes to verify their return address by comparing the value retrieved from the stack with the value retrieved from the Shadow Stack. If they differ, an attack might have been detected.

Other kernel changes include:

  • Support for stable Intel Meteor Lake graphics.
  • More work on Rust elements of the kernel code, including network PHY drivers and bindings for work queues.
  • A sophisticated Copy On Write filesystem called Bcachefs is supported.


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The New GNOME 46 Desktop

We’ve written about GNOME 46 elsewhere , but it’s worth mentioning some of the big-ticket items here.

Files

The Files file browser now searches globally, which is the new default. To search in the local directory and subdirectories, click the new icon in the toolbar.

The Files file browser with the local search icon highlighted


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There’s a new search function in Preferences, too.

The search function in the Files file browser's Preferences screen

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The file copying information now appears in the bottom left corner. Clicking it expands the information being shown.

The Files file browser Copying file progress information

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

Settings

There’s a new System Menu option that groups Region & Language, Date & Time, and similar options.

The Files file browser's System option

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

Privacy has been renamed to Privacy & Security.

The Files file browser's Privacy & Security option

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

A new Accessibility option lets you turn on small on (I) and off (O) indicators on sliding buttons.

The Files file browser's On/Off Shapes option on the Accessibility Seeingscreen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

WebDAV and Microsoft Personal account support have been added to Online Accounts. However, absent from the Ubuntu implementation of GNOME 46 is a new online account option, called Microsoft 365.

The Files file browsers Online Accounts options

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

This ought to let you access your cloud-based Microsoft OneDrive files from within Files, but there’s a known issue with authentication which will be corrected in GNOME 46.1. Perhaps Canonical is waiting for the patch before revealing the option?

You can now remotely access your Ubuntu desktop, via RDP , as long as the account you’re logging into isn’t being used. You have to enable desktop sharing for Remote Desktop to work.

The Files file browser's Remote Login settings screen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

You must use an RDP client on the computer you’re connecting from. You can change the screen resolution once you’re connected, to cater for differences between the remote and the Ubuntu computer.

App Center

Ubuntu’s Snap-centric software app has been renamed to App Center. If you prefer using DEB files you’ll need to use the command line. App Center really wants you to use Snaps.

The Ubuntu 24.04 App Center showing the Thunderbird screen

Dave McKay/How-To Geek

Thunderbird is now a Snap, although there is a DEB available. But under the hood, it installs the Snap version.

Security Enhancements

Ubuntu packages are now built with security-hardening features that block many security vulnerabilities, rendering them unexploitable.

The gcc compiler and dpkg now default to -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=3 instead of -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 which greatly increases buffer overflow detection and mitigation. dpkg now defaults to use -mbranch-protection=standard, designed to mitigate code reuse attacks on ARM64.

Combined with automated security updates, and better support for Secure Boot and disk encryption, Noble Numbat is much more secure than any previous Ubuntu version, right out of the box.

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Software Versions

These are the software versions of some common packages.

  • Kernel: 6.8.0-22-generic
  • LibreOffice: 24.2.2.2
  • Thunderbird: 115.9.0-1
  • Firefox: 124.0.2
  • Files: 46.0
  • GCC: 13.2.0
  • binutils: 2.52
  • glibc: 2.33
  • GNU Debugger: 15.0.50.2024040

Is Ubuntu 24.04 Worth the Upgrade?

In short, yes. Ubuntu 24.04 is definitely worth the upgrade. If you only use LTS builds, your two-year wait is over, and you’ll find that Noble Numbat was worth the wait.

If you hopped onto Ubuntu 23.10 last October, the increased security alone makes it worth the upgrade. The benefits of GNOME 46 and the other kernel improvements just make it all the more compelling.

I’m slightly disenchanted with Canonical’s ongoing push to make Snap a virtual monopoly on their distribution, but I don’t expect that will slow down the rush for most users to upgrade.

  • Title: Latest Features of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS: The Noble Numbat Release Explained
  • Author: Nova
  • Created at : 2024-08-30 01:10:32
  • Updated at : 2024-08-31 01:10:32
  • Link: https://blog-min.techidaily.com/latest-features-of-ubuntu-2404-lts-the-noble-numbat-release-explained/
  • License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.